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USDA Secretary Brooke Rollins said the agency is not carrying out large-scale layoffs, but may pursue "focused and limited" reductions in force.
The agency, which oversees federally funded nutrition programs and supports food safety, says moving more than 2,000 ...
Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins is closing several D.C.-area buildings but notably will not pursue a large-scale ...
The agency will begin a months-long shift to move its workforce away from Washington, D.C., and into five regional hubs, ...
The U.S. Department of Agriculture will relocate much of its Washington, D.C., workforce to five regional hubs and vacate ...
Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said the plan to relocate workers was intended to bring the agency’s staff closer to its ...
USDA plans massive relocation moving 2,600 workers from Washington to 5 hub cities while closing historic Beltsville ...
The U.S. Department of Agriculture says shifting thousands of D.C.-based staff to regional offices will save money without ...
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MiBolsilloColombia on MSNUSDA relocates thousands of D.C. workers as part of a major federal downsizingThe USDA will move most of its D.C.-based staff to five regional hubs to cut costs and improve efficiency, affecting ...
Rollins said USDA may fill vacant positions with people based in the areas of Salt Lake City; Fort Collins, Colorado; ...
The move is reminiscent of a similar plan from Trump’s first presidency that crushed morale and hurt the agency for years to ...
For the second time this year, workers at a science division of the Agriculture Department voted overwhelmingly to unionize in apparent revolt against the administration’s plan to relocate them ...
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